Ads
By
AFP
Published
Feb 25, 2011
Reading time
3 minutes
Download
Download the article
Print
Text size

Fendi and Prada: chincilla, mink and futuristic flying caps

By
AFP
Published
Feb 25, 2011

Feb 24 - Faux-savage women prowled down the catwalks at Milan's Fashion Week on Thursday, enveloped in luxurious chinchilla and mink stoles, British-inspired woollen wrap dresses and futuristic flying caps.


MaxMara at Milan Fashion Week, A/W 2011-12 collection

MaxMara designer Laura Lusuardi's drew on the classic British country look for her show, reinterpreting kilts and urbanising Irish knitwear with long-haired alpaca and camel tartan bustiers and skirts.

The collection was aimed at "the active, younger and more animated woman," Lusuardi said backstage: "She is always elegant though, and ageless in her way."

But while she described the collection's tones -- light greys, browns, Sixties' yellows, antique silvers and golds -- as "colours of the city," Lusuardi's models had an almost wild, earthy vibe about them.


MaxMara at Milan Fashion Week, A/W 2011-12 collection

Figure-hugging knitted jumper-dresses were topped with oversized fur neckwarmers, and leather skirts were paired with fur bodices or a long, dark brown, oversized coat that masked the face, enveloping its wearer up to the eyes.

In Fendi's show, Karl Lagerfield and Silvia Venturini Fendi dazzled with a collection inspired by the "perverse" woman, with models wearing high-heeled brogues and swinging mustard, blue and red boxed bags, their hair in chignons.

"She's a composed woman with moments of madness and frivolity. A woman who dares," Fendi told AFP backstage before the show.


Fendi at Milan Fashion Week, A/W 2011-12 collection

High necklines with sober skirts to the knee were broken up by dashes of pink, orange, green and azure, in block colours or glimpsed through pleats, for "a woman who has an idea of colour that's all her own."

The designers added a "faux-savage" tinge to the collection with asymmetrical jackets in netting and shetland, and cloaks and luxurious stoles in collages of sable, fox, chinchilla and mink.

In an attempt to "move away from the concept of the 'it' bag," Fendi and Lagerfield presented a wider collection for the autumn-winter show, featuring highly structured bags in leather, or in varnished blues and oranges.


Fendi at Milan Fashion Week, A/W 2011-12 collection

Wide coats in dark blues and greys tailored in at the thigh were set off by coloured tights and brogues feminised with a lace-like design etched by laser.

The star detail was a clutch decorated with semi-precious stones, one of Fendi's favourites. "It's a jewel, almost too pretty to wear," she sighed.

Ditching the daring woman for the urban ballerina, the D&G show was an explosion of fluorescent oranges, pinks and greens with models sporting cotton and silk T-shirts over tutu-style brightly-coloured feather skirts.


D&G at Milan Fashion Week, A/W 2011-12 collection

Huge multi-coloured letters featured on most of the outfits, from silk and chiffron one-pieces to woollen tube dresses worn with masculine, oversized jackets and high-heeled trainers.

At Prada, the last main show of the day, guests perched on polystyrene cubes alongside a brilliant white runway spanning two floors, in theme with Miuccia Prada's crew of futuristic airwomen and sea-creature creations.


Prada at Milan Fashion Week, A/W 2011-12 collection

Pillar-box red, black and cream coats with large silver buttons were topped off with black, silver or turquoise flying helmet-style caps in fur, velvet and snakeskin.

Dresses were medium-long, hemmed just above the knee, with wide and soft checkered patterns on the front in dark green, black, white and burgundy, with a block of strong contrasting colour on the reverse.


Prada at Milan Fashion Week, A/W 2011-12 collection

A couple of silk, long-sleeved robes suggestive of pyjamas in pale blue and pink heralded in a collection of wide-lapelled dresses in delicate oranges and yellows, adorned with large, shimmering scales that rustled down the catwalk.

by Ella Ide

Copyright © 2024 AFP. All rights reserved. All information displayed in this section (dispatches, photographs, logos) are protected by intellectual property rights owned by Agence France-Presse. As a consequence you may not copy, reproduce, modify, transmit, publish, display or in any way commercially exploit any of the contents of this section without the prior written consent of Agence France-Presses.